I agree! However, now I look at it as vile humans, (especially if cruel cowards to babies, toddlers or animals), getting their comeuppance from decent man Sherlock! 😉
"... I leave my estate, with all its advantages and all its disadvantages, to my brother, your father, whence it will, no doubt, descend to you. If you can enjoy it in peace, well and good! If you find you cannot, take my advice, my boy, and leave it to your deadliest enemy." This is probably my favorite line from Sherlock Holmes's stories. So ominous and full of intrigue!
@@sherlock_holmes_magpie_audio Toonbat? Please don't resort to purile name calling. I know you're trying to be "trendy" and "cool", but you run the risk of not being understood. Which, of course, may be your aim.
Aww I felt for Sherlock Holmes in this one 😢. That line “that he should come to me for help, & that I should send him away to his death...” got me. One of the things I love so dearly is Holmes’s sense of vindication & honor in avenging someone
AnnaElisavetta Vonnedozza The description immediately following was kept in every detail by actor Jeremy Brett, the only true Sherlock Holmes on the screen, big or small. I say true because he obviously read every tale in which he incarnated the great fictive detective, climbing into his very skin!
I hope everyone will "like" this comment so that it is both "top" and "newest" for others. This isn't for ego, but instead because many comments contain a spoiler I hope others won't see before first hearing the story. To make the comment big enough for that purpose I'll add here, again, that Greg's reading and acting of these ACD stories is unparalleled and brings them to life in the freshest and most marvelous way. Hoorah! All the best to Greg and all.
Suffering chronic illness as I do these stories are a godsend - I can't really read them. Thank you. Can't believe 124 quarter-wits actually downvoted this excellent rendition
I imagine that other US readers like myself suspected right away that "KKK" in this story was that infamous KKK of USA that has brought so much shame to our nation, but many british readers probably did not. Maybe the only major plot point in any Sherlock Holmes story I figured out before Holmes did
@@vidhantsharma2092 The KKK (Klu Klux Klan, how stupid is that name) is a white supremacist group which was formed during the American civil war. It is an extremist group which, up until the mid 70's, actively harassed, murdered mostly by lynching, burned crosses in black ppl's front yards and otherwise spewed their vile hate for black people all the while spewing lies of why white ppl are superior. While they have, for the most part, become a paper tiger now; there have been many sick groups like this spring up. I have lived in the deep south all my life and I remember when I was a little girl and you drove thru a shit hole town in the middle of the country, the klan would be in full regalia collecting money at the one stop light.
@@vidhantsharma2092 The Klu Klux Klan, a hyper-nationalistic hate group that targets those they see as not "real" Americans. They sprung out of the American South after the US civil war and used both the threat of violence via lynching mobs and their political influence via their ties to the Democrat Party (which they no longer have) and their White Citizens Coucils/ Kountry Klub Klans to target said individuals. They typically targeted black people and non-protesants.
The true art of writing, is the picture it paints in your head. And with lines like "the storm whined and throbbed like a child in the chimney ". Just absolute genius.
I read that during Victorian times, poor children were "employed" by chimney sweeps to get up in the chimneys to do cleaning that no adult could do. As they were extremely thin from basically starvation the could do this-kind of. But as you might imagine, children sometimes got stuck and even died. Utterly horrible. I wonder if this is where Doyle got this metaphorical line.
Masterfully read (as usuall) and the joke was on me...After all this time I never realized the FIVE ORANGE PIPS original plot was FAR different from the Universal movie adaptation...Be that as it may always a pleasure to be read to by a master of storytelling-even if the stories were created by someone else... Eagerly awaiting your rendition of GREAT EXPECTATIONS
Interesting read for a Canadian such as I in 2021! Orange pips: It took me a while to understand what these were. Would call them pits here. KKK: I was surprised Watson did not know about this terrible gang. But then I realized that it was a North American horror and that news would not have reached Britain of their behaviour.
The 19th century German writer Karl May wrote about KKK before sir Arthur Conan Doyle did. He described their masks and how dangerous they were. So if he, as a German who seldom travelled, knew of KKK, some people in Britain must have known about them, too. I think KKK was not unknown in Europe in those days, but it wasn´t a household name and most people didn´t know what exactly their practices were. I imagine for a lot of readers, this story meant getting more information on the name they vaguely remembered seeing in the newspaper once.
Why did it have to end like that? Abrupt disappointment. Holmes’ plan to avenge them would have done perfectly well. We wouldn’t have even had to hear about it being carried out. Conan dropped the ball on this one.
@@J.L.Media. I think he wanted to give us message that life you cannot guarantee all the things you plan will surely happen and unexpected things can happen too
Ok, I had to listen to this as my homework(or a resume at least, but I found the wrong video and here I'am) and as someone who only ever saw the movies, I may pass arround here from time to time(at least it is less harsh of an experience as H.P lovecraft wich really tested my reading comprehension both with my native and english language knowledge and maked me fail miserably)
Pass around...I would say better English expression would be " pass by". Or better yet, "drop in," or "drop by". Also wich should be "which". Otherwise, excellent! Oh, and also, it's "made me fail", not "maked me fail".
Seems odd to my modern thinking... he's in dire danger, let's send off unguarded ... or alternatively I could call on some of the chaps I have employed before, and whom this gentleman can afford to pay handsomely, to protect him on his journey home.
Think this is my favourite because it’s the first one I recall reading on my own accord as A Child, even though it’s ending is some what anti-climatic, it’s just an enthralling tale along the way
No offense toward any with differing opinions, but despite the elements I liked in this story such as the orange pips and the early reference to the Klan, the plot itself just didn't amount to much for me. An intriguing beginning that then just never materialized.
I felt the same way when I read the story at the age of 15. But now I appreciate the horror of the ending and how realistic it is. It stresses how much Sherlock Holmes actually cares about his clients and how horribly powerless a person can be against a fanatic gang. It´s powerful and it resides in a different country, so even Sherlock Holmes can only battle it with the help of mail. Remember, these were the times when all the criminal organizations we know today were springing up and growing in power. I think that for sir ACD´s audience, there was so much horror in the mere existence of a gang like that, that they didn´t need an intriguing ending.
To be fair, it is apparent in these stories that the Scotland Yard of his London is hopelessly incompetent and corrupt. The sheer number of innocent deaths prevented by Holmes due to the apathy and lack of investment from their officers is staggering, even for policemen. Holmes has every right to take a dim view of the law enforcement branch in his city, but I must point out that he is always very careful to abide by the _judicial_ practices of his country. Civilian investigators are fairly common, and in some countries licensed private investigators can both make arrests and be considered an officer of the common law. That is not to say they are necessarily more competent or less corruptible, but I daresay in the canon of Holmes' stories, he has proven himself to be far less corrupt and arrogant than the police officers of his polity. In addition, policemen are themselves civilians and citizens. The only other thing they could be is soldiers, and they better not be.
That was probably good for your imagination and your vocabulary! I read Sherlock Holmes stories when I was young. Now I really enjoy listening to them on UA-cam (in an English accent)!
I still remember the first time I heard this story from listening to another audiobook reading of it. Still remember feeling the chill of an evil presence when the KKK was mentioned - learned what it was that day because I was listening to it in the car with my parents. Still feel that chill whenever I read that story and reach the line 'Have you ever heard of 'Ku Klux Klan?' even though I now know that this story barely tipped the iceberg of their evilness.
It is a sort of coded threat. Not sure why orange pips were used in particular. It’s a bit like a white feather sent to u in the war meant you were a coward (and that someone might come for you)
Right, as an American, pips were a puzzle, but not the KKK. Interestingly that group was not just a Southern thing. There were night riders in Vermont who burned crosses, etc., on Catholics, French, and or Indians (indigenous) properties.
@@rosehagood3146 When he receives their threat, he says "My sins have overtaken me!" That means he realized what KKK was doing was wrong - perhaps not the racism, but definitely the murders. He left them and kept incriminating documents with him. They murdered him because he didn't give them the documents, so that he wouldn't show them to the police and testify against them. (He wasn't planning to do that, but they didn't know.)
@@Coopbean Nope, they couldn't get the estate. It was the incriminating records of their past crimes they were after. Hence the instructions to John Openshaw to put them in the garden for KKK to find.
The member of KKK who managed to throw John Openshaw into the river Thames, making it look like an accident, was the captain of an American ship that sailed to a lot of places around the world. He'd always send a threatening letter (five orange pips) to a person from a port the ship was staying in, so that the letter would arrive ahead of him. And later, he arrived there when the place was on his ship's schedule, and murder that person. (That's what he did to John Openshaw, his father and his grandfather.) Holmes couldn't prove the murder of John Openshaw to him, so he decided to scare him by sending him the same threatening letter (five orange pips). So that the captain would think another member of the gang was after him. But the captain never received the letter because his ship sank and he died.
This story gave me nightmare as a kid, along with "the devil's foot" , "the speckled band" and the prologue of "the hound of the baskervills".
I agree! However, now I look at it as vile humans, (especially if cruel cowards to babies, toddlers or animals), getting their comeuppance from decent man Sherlock! 😉
Conan Doyle's way with words and story telling draws you in!
"... I leave my estate, with all its advantages and all its disadvantages, to my brother, your father, whence it will, no doubt, descend to you. If you can enjoy it in peace, well and good! If you find you cannot, take my advice, my boy, and leave it to your deadliest enemy."
This is probably my favorite line from Sherlock Holmes's stories. So ominous and full of intrigue!
It's a corker, toonbat
Aand John and his father did not listen tto uncle Openshaw !!!
Better than '"dumb-bell," Holmes said seriously'?
@@sherlock_holmes_magpie_audio Toonbat? Please don't resort to purile name calling. I know you're trying to be "trendy" and "cool", but you run the risk of not being understood. Which, of course, may be your aim.
@@waynemarvin5661 the person they are responding to has named themselves "toonbat".
Aww I felt for Sherlock Holmes in this one 😢. That line “that he should come to me for help, & that I should send him away to his death...” got me. One of the things I love so dearly is Holmes’s sense of vindication & honor in avenging someone
AnnaElisavetta Vonnedozza after reading the actual stories, I realise Holmes was not such a cold sociopath as some screen adaptations insist.
AnnaElisavetta Vonnedozza The description immediately following was kept in every detail by actor Jeremy Brett, the only true Sherlock Holmes on the screen, big or small. I say true because he obviously read every tale in which he incarnated the great fictive detective, climbing into his very skin!
Should have sent him to a hotel. Or housed him at Baker Street.
@@KurtMcGowan Hollywood much more immoral than Conan Doyle was.
He does come across as quite a nice person, under his shell
Have come back to these stories whilst on lockdown in Italy. Very grateful to have them to help the hours go by 🙏
They are great for that. Hope you are well. Greetings from Texas, the Lone Star State.
The unexpected reference to that American organization was unexpected. The ending was fitting. Thank you. ❤
I didn't know how sinister a topic the original story of The Five Orange Pips is. It kinda gave me chills.
Horsham!
I love Surrey, Guildford (where I was at College...and I grew up in Salford! Could you get more of a complete difference!)
Thank-You Mum x
I hope everyone will "like" this comment so that it is both "top" and "newest" for others. This isn't for ego, but instead because many comments contain a spoiler I hope others won't see before first hearing the story. To make the comment big enough for that purpose I'll add here, again, that Greg's reading and acting of these ACD stories is unparalleled and brings them to life in the freshest and most marvelous way. Hoorah! All the best to Greg and all.
Suffering chronic illness as I do these stories are a godsend - I can't really read them. Thank you. Can't believe 124 quarter-wits actually downvoted this excellent rendition
I imagine that other US readers like myself suspected right away that "KKK" in this story was that infamous KKK of USA that has brought so much shame to our nation, but many british readers probably did not. Maybe the only major plot point in any Sherlock Holmes story I figured out before Holmes did
Precisely. It never really occurred to me that the average Victorian Londoner wouldn't have much reason to know of the Klan.
I was about 12 when I first read this story and I'm from Australia, I'd never heard about them before then, that was when I was taught about them.
Sorry but who is kkk of USA u r talking about ? Can u explain
@@vidhantsharma2092 The KKK (Klu Klux Klan, how stupid is that name) is a white supremacist group which was formed during the American civil war. It is an extremist group which, up until the mid 70's, actively harassed, murdered mostly by lynching, burned crosses in black ppl's front yards and otherwise spewed their vile hate for black people all the while spewing lies of why white ppl are superior.
While they have, for the most part, become a paper tiger now; there have been many sick groups like this spring up.
I have lived in the deep south all my life and I remember when I was a little girl and you drove thru a shit hole town in the middle of the country, the klan would be in full regalia collecting money at the one stop light.
@@vidhantsharma2092 The Klu Klux Klan, a hyper-nationalistic hate group that targets those they see as not "real" Americans. They sprung out of the American South after the US civil war and used both the threat of violence via lynching mobs and their political influence via their ties to the Democrat Party (which they no longer have) and their White Citizens Coucils/ Kountry Klub Klans to target said individuals. They typically targeted black people and non-protesants.
The true art of writing, is the picture it paints in your head. And with lines like "the storm whined and throbbed like a child in the chimney ". Just absolute genius.
I read that during Victorian times, poor children were "employed" by chimney sweeps to get up in the chimneys to do cleaning that no adult could do. As they were extremely thin from basically starvation the could do this-kind of. But as you might imagine, children sometimes got stuck and even died. Utterly horrible. I wonder if this is where Doyle got this metaphorical line.
I don't think everyone can do this. Also one reason I like rap, cooler than a power bears toe nail. (Outcast)😊
Crap cool on a polar bear's toenail
Masterfully read (as usuall) and the joke was on me...After all this time I never realized the FIVE ORANGE PIPS original plot was FAR different from the Universal movie adaptation...Be that as it may always a pleasure to be read to by a master of storytelling-even if the stories were created by someone else... Eagerly awaiting your rendition of GREAT EXPECTATIONS
Cheers Keith
Don’t await it too eagerly 😐😀
Wonderful narration and production
Thank you
Interesting read for a Canadian such as I in 2021!
Orange pips: It took me a while to understand what these were. Would call them pits here.
KKK: I was surprised Watson did not know about this terrible gang. But then I realized that it was a North American horror and that news would not have reached Britain of their behaviour.
The 19th century German writer Karl May wrote about KKK before sir Arthur Conan Doyle did. He described their masks and how dangerous they were. So if he, as a German who seldom travelled, knew of KKK, some people in Britain must have known about them, too.
I think KKK was not unknown in Europe in those days, but it wasn´t a household name and most people didn´t know what exactly their practices were. I imagine for a lot of readers, this story meant getting more information on the name they vaguely remembered seeing in the newspaper once.
Agreed. As an Irishman, I had no idea about them until I was 15 years old.
They are scum...
@@martavdz4972 Yeah, I think they gained a bit of extra infamy when their own founder balked at them and left. Given he was fairly well known
This is the saddest case I've read so far. With the most unsatisfying ending. 😔 Although I guess karma did them a favor... but still... poor John.
Why did it have to end like that? Abrupt disappointment. Holmes’ plan to avenge them would have done perfectly well. We wouldn’t have even had to hear about it being carried out. Conan dropped the ball on this one.
@@J.L.Media. I think he wanted to give us message that life you cannot guarantee all the things you plan will surely happen and unexpected things can happen too
One of my favorites 👍👍👍👍👍🎬
Ok, I had to listen to this as my homework(or a resume at least, but I found the wrong video and here I'am) and as someone who only ever saw the movies, I may pass arround here from time to time(at least it is less harsh of an experience as H.P lovecraft wich really tested my reading comprehension both with my native and english language knowledge and maked me fail miserably)
Pass around...I would say better English expression would be " pass by". Or better yet, "drop in," or "drop by". Also wich should be "which". Otherwise, excellent! Oh, and also, it's "made me fail", not "maked me fail".
Those Poor Wild Animals in a Cage 😔😔😔
"Life's Only Worth Living If You're Born Free" 🦁🐯🐒🐁🐶
Matt Munro - great stuff!
Best SH reader on YT
Thank you kind Sir...
That voice has a calming effect on the mind. 💖
Glad you think so!
I can fall asleep listening to the story’s he reads.
@@katherineroche9948me too!
Thank you! ❤
If only that letter had reached its destination.
At 33:45 Watson asks "But of what society?" This is both in the book and transcript. But the words are inaudible in the video.
Very nicely read!!
Seems odd to my modern thinking... he's in dire danger, let's send off unguarded ... or alternatively I could call on some of the chaps I have employed before, and whom this gentleman can afford to pay handsomely, to protect him on his journey home.
Think this is my favourite because it’s the first one I recall reading on my own accord as A Child, even though it’s ending is some what anti-climatic, it’s just an enthralling tale along the way
Agreed.
@@sherlock_holmes_magpie_audio thank you ever so much for your truly incredible narrations, i look forward to hearing more on Spotify too hopefully
Probably my favorite "Sherlock"
No offense toward any with differing opinions, but despite the elements I liked in this story such as the orange pips and the early reference to the Klan, the plot itself just didn't amount to much for me. An intriguing beginning that then just never materialized.
I felt the same way when I read the story at the age of 15. But now I appreciate the horror of the ending and how realistic it is. It stresses how much Sherlock Holmes actually cares about his clients and how horribly powerless a person can be against a fanatic gang. It´s powerful and it resides in a different country, so even Sherlock Holmes can only battle it with the help of mail.
Remember, these were the times when all the criminal organizations we know today were springing up and growing in power. I think that for sir ACD´s audience, there was so much horror in the mere existence of a gang like that, that they didn´t need an intriguing ending.
love listening to these
Compassion for ALL LIFE!
STOP Humans OPPRESSION OF OTHER ANIMALS! 💞
Can you also record "Sherlock Holmes: The Unauthorized Biography" by Nick Rennison audiobook. Thanks.
The five oranges pips could easily be the equivalent to the Black Spot.
That's true. An ill omen, talisman. I'm sure there's a better word...
@@sherlock_holmes_magpie_audio How about "death sentence"?
‘I am my own police.’ Reassuring quote from a citizen who deals with crime.
To be fair, it is apparent in these stories that the Scotland Yard of his London is hopelessly incompetent and corrupt. The sheer number of innocent deaths prevented by Holmes due to the apathy and lack of investment from their officers is staggering, even for policemen. Holmes has every right to take a dim view of the law enforcement branch in his city, but I must point out that he is always very careful to abide by the _judicial_ practices of his country. Civilian investigators are fairly common, and in some countries licensed private investigators can both make arrests and be considered an officer of the common law.
That is not to say they are necessarily more competent or less corruptible, but I daresay in the canon of Holmes' stories, he has proven himself to be far less corrupt and arrogant than the police officers of his polity.
In addition, policemen are themselves civilians and citizens. The only other thing they could be is soldiers, and they better not be.
Do you think it’s different now?
@@DMTrojanhe dealt with incompetence with respect not fighting them as today! Just bringing Facts, Like or Hate had very little bearing!
This short story could have made a novel!
So weird my father was John Openshaw and his grandfather was Joseph.
Very strange...
!!!!!! :}
Yet your last name is "Read"
Undead. Guess you’ve never heard of screen names or marriage.
That is weirdly exciting.
Feels like David Burke, the best Watson, is telling the story. Great read!
Honoured, Sohail, to be in that company.
I am also reminded of David Burke when listening to the narration. Very similar indeed.
I learn this at school / my teacher gave this as homework listen and write clues
That was probably good for your imagination and your vocabulary! I read Sherlock Holmes stories when I was young. Now I really enjoy listening to them on UA-cam (in an English accent)!
"Charming climate of Florida" obviously ACD had never been there.
Ha! It must be nice sometime, Rose?
Yes, before A/C!
It's awesome guys......... heard all the episodes.... felt Sherlock doing thingy....
Thank you so much
Cheers Soham Paul. Nice Chinese takeaway in Soham.
Thank you 😊
Ty
Ty for listening.
I wish Jeremy Brett would of finished filming all the Holmes' adventures. This would of been one of his best
I still remember the first time I heard this story from listening to another audiobook reading of it. Still remember feeling the chill of an evil presence when the KKK was mentioned - learned what it was that day because I was listening to it in the car with my parents. Still feel that chill whenever I read that story and reach the line 'Have you ever heard of 'Ku Klux Klan?' even though I now know that this story barely tipped the iceberg of their evilness.
What is the meaning of the 5 orange pips? Thank you in advance
It is a sort of coded threat. Not sure why orange pips were used in particular. It’s a bit like a white feather sent to u in the war meant you were a coward (and that someone might come for you)
Oranges are grown in Florida
Thank you in advance
There is a summary on wikipedia here:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Five_Orange_Pips
How many Brits call a seed a pip and how many did back then?
Always been an orange pip as far as I know.
Pips is what we always call them when in oranges or apples (and possibly in other things that don’t spring to mind right now)
Right, as an American, pips were a puzzle, but not the KKK. Interestingly that group was not just a Southern thing. There were night riders in Vermont who burned crosses, etc., on Catholics, French, and or Indians (indigenous) properties.
When a seed was a pip?
It's another word for "pit" or "stone".
I still say orange, lemon pip
@@kathleencampbell2298 I had to look up the word. What part of the world do you live in where "pip" is used?
@@thomasstevens1436 I'm English and my family used to say pip
@@thomasstevens1436from South Africa 😃
Love it
Thanks, Praggaparamita Ray!
@@sherlock_holmes_magpie_audio , welcome
Plzz upload O Henry's The gift of the Magi.
Back to reality ❣️
What was the reason for the killing of the 3 people of the same family?
They betrayed the murderous KKK.
I would say it’s probably whoever inherits the money. The klan is after the estate so whoever owns it they will try to exact that revenge.
@@Coopbean What puzzles me is this: the uncle's views appear to align with those of the KKK. So why would they be after him?
@@rosehagood3146 When he receives their threat, he says "My sins have overtaken me!" That means he realized what KKK was doing was wrong - perhaps not the racism, but definitely the murders. He left them and kept incriminating documents with him.
They murdered him because he didn't give them the documents, so that he wouldn't show them to the police and testify against them. (He wasn't planning to do that, but they didn't know.)
@@Coopbean Nope, they couldn't get the estate. It was the incriminating records of their past crimes they were after. Hence the instructions to John Openshaw to put them in the garden for KKK to find.
Back to reality ❣️.
Fabulous as usual. I'd pronounce it eqwinokshl with sh rather than t.
Yes. You're probably right!
Ok.
Can some one please explain the ending?
The member of KKK who managed to throw John Openshaw into the river Thames, making it look like an accident, was the captain of an American ship that sailed to a lot of places around the world. He'd always send a threatening letter (five orange pips) to a person from a port the ship was staying in, so that the letter would arrive ahead of him. And later, he arrived there when the place was on his ship's schedule, and murder that person. (That's what he did to John Openshaw, his father and his grandfather.)
Holmes couldn't prove the murder of John Openshaw to him, so he decided to scare him by sending him the same threatening letter (five orange pips). So that the captain would think another member of the gang was after him. But the captain never received the letter because his ship sank and he died.
@@martavdz4972thank you!
Back to reality ❤
I have said it once and I'll say it twice, no one reads holmes or father brown better than greg wagland
I agree. Thank you!!
You have the perfect face for audio books 😆😆😆😅
Who kill them and sink their boats? Still mistery for me
Unsatisfying conclusion to this one!
Visto 1/6/20
the comment BELOW mine IS A SPOILER - do NOT read til you listen to the whole story!!
dear sir arthur - why?!
All these naughty spoilers!!
Day 1: 12:30
20:40
Karma strikes again!
Room=Wroom
anyone else here for school
qia nanene
X
Ugh have to do this for skl -_- alltho once u get into it its acc not bad
US readers when hearing kkk: Oh shoot! This isn't going to end well!
British readers when hearing kkk: I say, what is this preposterous word; kkk?
You have no idea do you?
Typical american.
Watson reading one of “Clark Russell’s fine sea stories.” Hmm...